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ABT OUT VOTE, ‘WOMEN’S PLAN Campaign to be Carried in All Parts of N. D. Devils Lake, Ayg. 15—The local rganization of the National Get- dut-The-Voters club received its first plan of campaign in a talk| efore a joint meeting of the W. C. .,U. and the Chautauqua boosters | Jub at the Baldwin cottage, L: | vood, by Mrs, Fred P, Mann, ational committeewoman iorth Dakota, The campaign, according to Mrs. P. Mann, will culminate in every vomen voter, regardless of party uf- ‘ilations, being at the polls before line o'clock in the fall election, Intelligent voting is the crying nebd of the nation today, regardless of. parties it is the duty of every sitizen to vote and vote with a full | snowledge of what he is voting for,” stdted Mrs, n, She then cited the result of unintelligent voting in the:primary election when; although the! state went strong for Coolidge the, voters voted for LaFollette electors, with the result that the Coolidge voters may vote for only one: elector in the fall election. Posted schools of instruction for | 's, intelligent voting mass meet- ire some of the things that the ociation will bring into its 1 ign, according to Mrs, Mann, WOMAN JUSTICE | FINES GAMBLER | | from Yevils Lake, N. D., “Tilirty di Ten dolla calmly and professionally did Mr: Anta Redmond, justice of the pe administer justice to L. D. Smith, charged with gambling, in city court. In the absence of Judge Duell, and! with two eriminal cases demanding immediate action, Redmond in the justice seat and heard the cases and meted justice. Smith was taken into custody by the: sheriff and police in a raid Sat- urday night on Smith’s home on the West side. The authorities found eight negroes engaged in a card] game. Smith was locked up. He will serve his thirty days in the county j Public Servants. : Will Form a Federation Vienna, Aug. 15.—Men and women engaged in public service, especially teachers, will soon have an interna- tional federation similar to the inter- national federations of trade unions. In connection with the internation- al trade union congress held here early in June, there was also held a meeting of representatives of Aus-: trian, French, Dutch, German, and Czecho-Sloyak organizations of civil servants, These decided to call into life a civil servants’ international, with a teachers’ sub-section. The date for the first international congress, at which the organization is to be definitely launched, has been fixed for October 27, and the conven- tion city will be Paris, It is expect- ed that British and Belgian organiza- tions will also be represented. Some 7,000 French, 5,000 Austrian and 7,000 German organized teachers have already declared their readiness to affiliate. STONE BEARS INDIAN MESSAGE Jamestown, N. D., Aug. 15.—George Thompson recently brought an in- teresting bit of rock in from the Burnett Kansell farm, 12 miles west of Buchanan, and has turned it over to the local historian, Dana Wright, to see what he can make of it. The rock was picked up near a small lake| about which are a number of Indianj tepee circles still marked with large bowlders and, on a smooth surface of six or seven square inches in area, bears a number of sharp cuts or seratehes in varying series that ap- pear to be part of an Indian message. Those who have examined the stone so far, however, have been unable to trace any definite characters. or fit the hieroglyphics into any signs or message. Mr. Wright will have it examined by some one who under- stands more of Indian signs in an attempt to have it deciphered.” The marks on the stone are as though cut with a sharp steel but Mr, Wright says that they could have been. made with bits of flint such as the Indians are known to have used for that purpose. One end of the stone is worn smooth as though from holding it gvhile the cutting was done.: dj GREAT PLAINS Winnipeg, Aug. 15.—The 1925 convention of the Great Plains sec- tion of the Society of Horticultural Science will be held in -Fargo and Mandan, N. D. The executive com- mittee has notified A, F. Yaeger of Fargo of the acceptance of the invi- tation. which he had extended on be- half"of North Dakota. The, sessions will, as usual, occ! py one week, half of which will be spent.in Fargo, where the agricul- tural college and central experiment station are located. The remsinder. of the time will be spent at Man- dan, in the western portion of, the state, where conditions are dry- er, and where there exists marked difference from oe that pre- of one, of the ean ea experimental stations in the United! States, Leipsic, Germany, Aug. 15.—Con- Feminine Backs Of Future To Become Things Of Beauty the fact that the inflation perfod and f the war have wiped out the middle class, which before the war was the principal supporter of the finer arts, London, Aug. 15.—New discover- ies in Egypt in the next few years may put King \Tutankhamen in the shade. Relics of Egypt’s stone age —flint weapons, hovsehold pottery and ornaments—are being” revealed as a result of new ard deeper ex- cavations. They are of a pattern that dates them as older than any yet found in Europe. | Copper-bottoming your pots.” ; ho,” he replied, “I’m alumintuming | test is, not merely to say them, but | fish sauce shop. McGinn iz bot Tee wore ried, wor-mid, © = ver "you. — Al Jockers, Famous When 30 mane y love you, how canT be certain ofan A ers’ view nightly. “Most of them ; and environment. | tng of drums in European orcheg | industrious as well. | Tongue Twisters That Have Become Clas: Some time ago there, appeared ia j the British comic Journal Punch, @ particularly effective tongue twist er, which ran something to this ef: fect: “A lady was walking down a country lane when she met a tinker. “Ab,” she sald, “I see you are “Oh. ‘em, mum.” As a tongue twister this ig pretty hard to get, though perhaps the American form of the words 1s just a trifle more difficult to wrap one’s tongue around: “I'm aluminuming ’em, mum.” There are, of course, many thou- sands of these traps for the unwars floating about. Here are a few. The to manage to repeat them quickly. say a half dozen times without get- ting one’s tongue tied up fn a knot. The sea ceaseth and it sufficeth us. A glowing gleam growing green The bleak breeze blighted the] ” ORS oka aire ae inte Holland’s Outdoor Prison System Is Successful The Hague, Aug. 15.—The “out- | door prison” system here has been | officially announced a success, and | the Dutch government has made ar- S48) rangements to extend the idea to various parts of the country. This decision came after an experiment for’ Ipewich?—Kansag City Star. | yhick has continued more’ thaw a | year, and it is Feparted, of all the | prisoners placed on their ‘honor not Music of the Orient | to escape, and during which time they Harsh and Strideni Vs." siiowed mack freedom, not i The idea as to what real music! single individual abused the trust. really is varies according to race| The experiment began when 60 Music of the prisoners were drafted to the town of Orient is apt to jar upon sensitive | Veenhuizen to convert moorland into occidental ears. Take the question cultivated fields, and they showed of drums ag an instance. The play-, themselves very muck interested and The men were tras has reached a high standard o1| not supervised or guarded in any art, though it is rare that more] way. The foreman of each gang was, The driver of this wrecked car thought he could heat the train to the crossing. He failed like hundreds of others. The picture shows what was left after the collision. PARSHALL BOY AUTO VICTIM Minot, Aug. John Thoreson, 5 year old son of J. A. Thoreson of Parshall was killed last evening when struck by an vutomobile. The} boy was pls across the street from the Parshall oil station where the father and is declared to have run acro the street directly in front of a c: driven by Henry Fells of Minot, No blame is attached to the driver. Cook By Wire Instead of by Fire. Flesh of fresh-frying fish. High roller, low roller, lower roller, : . A box of mixed biscuits, a mixed biscuft box. She stood at the gate welcoming him in, i She sells sea shells at the shore. Which switch is the switch, miss, Buy a home from us. We have the best in the west and will loan you the money to, Richholt’s Cash and Carry | Phone 631-W | Grocery f ith & mare | The Original Cash and Carry Store. SATURDAY SPECIALS 2 dozen” ; Strictly Fresh Eggs..............eeeeeeee 45c ... 20¢ es ee 1 a $1.00 hal BrUMea eer hols ios taxceicieocinn Sa seane 25c Cream of Wheat, 3 pkgs....... : Thousand Island Dressing, regular price 25c. Saturday, 2 for......... Fancy Spring Chicken, per Ib.. Large Squabs, Mach? 350.15 eats Swift’s Rib Back Bacon, DER IDE ecnices cium steers: Swift’s Picnic Hams, weight 6 to 8 Ibs. per lb...... 12 Ibs. Granulated Sugar............. Van Camp Beans, regular price 15c. 2 cans.... 3 National Biscuits, i shimmy,” he Orchestra Director, lightly, Makes Interesting Discovery New York City,—Al Jockers, orchestra leader at the famous Woodmansten Inn, declares that the next generation of women’s backs will be the most beautiful ever known. “The shimmy,” says he, “has done it.” ' Women from all the forty-eight states, and from many foreign countries, dance before Mr. Jock- comments, “some slightly, some markedly, and just as the advent of easy transportation in cities has made the feminine ankle trimmer, so the twists'and wrig- gles whi accompany several Kinds of jazz will change the backs of the next generation. “‘Worried’ and its imitations, with their muscle exercising, three part saxophone harmonies, will be in a large way responsible for this transformation. And since American jazz has hit every country, you find the backs im- proved svery-where,” Gosh, What a Fun ny Looking Bottle If tiny Marion Lawson thinks she’s going to get milk through the rubber tube she’s greatly mistaken. of gas for a bad cold. She's going,to get a nice mouthful She was the first baby in Georgia to take the chlorine gas treatment from 2 machine made for infants, and Miss Gladys Whittaker, nurse at Grady Hospital, Atlanta, is shown administering it. DAVIS “LEARNS” John W. Davis, waving a greeting to hear. the forma] notification of. idegtial candidate at Clarksburg, W. Va. OF NOMINATION to the thousands who had gathered fis nomination as Democratic pres- Davis is seen here with his old “pal” Lafaetta Blake. servatories of music are declining alarmingly in Germany. Recently an institution with a normal enrollment of 300 pupils went bankrupt, and a great many smaller undertakings have been forced to liquidate. During. the inflgtion period these institutions were kept above water ly. the fact that the foreign myaic students paid five times the tuition of the natives, Since stabili- zation has’ taken place, however, thousands of foreigners have left’ Germany, finding it too expensive, and the music lovers who remain be- hind can for the most part afford to pay only about one-half the’ prewar ptuition fee. j How desperate the situation is may. be judged from the fact that the can- servatory students are permitted to play in movie houses and in cafes, a thing that was anathema before the war. There is also no objection to their earning money on the side by playing at dances. ‘ The chief reason for the plight-in which the musical art finds itself is than three or four are used. In a| however, not a prisoner, but a work. Burmese orchestra, however, the| man who joined voluntarily, two principal instruments are one) made of a seriea of drums callec| j the seingweing and a similar series | of gongs called the kyee or gongt| graduated in size, the drums being | played with the fingers and hands | and the gongs with knobsticks. Be. | sides these there are cymbals, tom: toms and castanets, the last-namec being much larger than the Eu ropean instruments and made oi bamboo. Of wind instruments there are only a number of clarinets an¢ one flute played by the leader o: conductor. String instruments arc not used, ‘and thefe are also nc brass instruments. Pleasant for Auntie | Little. Margaret was spending «| holiday with her aunt in Cornwall | Now, auntie was a spinster, and not in the first bloom of youth, In fact an unkind person had once heen heard to refer to her as “old,” ané we believe the other word used was “cat.” Anyhow, she was not young Auntie was determined to give her little niece a good time, anc¢ she arranged several pleasure trips in order to give Margaret a chance of appreciating the beauties of the Cornish scenery. i “When I take you to 8t. Ives I will show you the school that } went to when I was a. little girl,” promised kind auntie one day when they were out for a walk. “Oh, auntie, is it still here?” asked the child innocently. “I ex. pect it’s in rujng now, isn’t it?’— London Answers. Insect-Eating Plant An ingect-eating plant. 1s. the sun. dew, so called because of a shining. gticky substance secreted by glands in its’ leaves, Globules of this fluid glitter in the sunlight like a rare gem, says the Detroit News, By Theans of the sticky megs, the sun- dew attracts and entangles its prey. Then the edges of the leaf curve inward, forming a sort of stomach into which an acid secretion is poured to est the meal. The. Portions which cannot be digested are later thrown out and the trap is set for the next victim. The sundew seems to Know when food is near, for if meat is placed close to it the plant slowly reaches out for it. If a portion is placed |} within a few inches of the ‘plant the leaf will bend toward it until the tiny haire enfold the delicacy and the sticky substance completes the grip. iia WOOL CLIP Low World wool production sees no, Promise of” increase, according to reports by the U. S. Department of Agriculture. There has been a large decrease in sheep in seven coun- tries producing more than half the world's ' wool. “ Ae od invest. Co. Phone 138. Scott’s Grocery f° YES!WE DELIVER i” pp PHONE 816 311 7TH a ry] Saturday Specials Cap Kota Campbell’s No. Coffee, per Ib.. 35c Pork and Gistrey © Beans ....... lothes Pins, per 2 doz. pkg. 8c Glencrest Thousand Is- land Dressing Brillo-Aluminum Clean- regulaf 25c.... 1 Oc ser, regular Harvest Cookies 25c seller..... 10c 4 |b. 80 Pkg. ee c 15c Light House Cleanser, per can 5c. 2 5 c 5 oz. Minneopa 6 cans........ Olives ....... Brown&Tiedman QUALITY GROCERY Successors to E. A. Brown. 120-5th St. Phone 53 SATURDAY SPECIALS Gee tak wien. ee FANCY PEACHES for canning. ‘ Onserate.% sialic bs aciejsiocpeiamieniassie $1.50 Will be higher next week. Head Lettuce, Leaf Lettuce, Cauliflower, Celery, Tomatoes, Celery .Cabbage, Radishes, Cucumbers, Onions, Carrots, Beets, Corn on ‘the Cob. Extra _special—Servbest, 5 sewed Broom. Regular price. $1.10. 75 Special price for Saturday only............ . 1c Luxree Toilet Tissue. $ 1 00 po, Special per dozen................000¢ Exclusive agents for Tea Garden Preserves and Jellies: Heinz Bulk Vinegar, sold exclusively. 2 PURE HIGH TEST SWEET CREAM Why experiment, with ordinary flour when experience has proved that the guaranteed flours or LY always make. ighter, whiter, better tasting and more wholesome bread. Better pastry too. Their wonderful goodness never varies. cst MORE WORTH Ef! ‘OF NORTH DAKOPA! 3 Ib. box...... Investors Mortgage| National Cookies—Harvest Mixed Special Low Price Saturday. —TRY RICHHOLT’S CASH AND CARRY PLAN— ee Ve Thank You” Raspberries, Blackberries, Peaches, Pears, Plums, Malaga Grapes, Watermelons, Cantaloupes, Crabapples. New Peas Wax Beans Carrots Beets Cucumbers Tomatoes Rhubarb Green Onions Liquid El Vampire Buy a 50c bottle and rid your home of flies. economical and sure. Quick Heinz’s Vinegar When you buy vinegar here you are always assured of the best as we handle no other kind. COTTAGE CHEESE — SWEET CREAM “Health Foods” We will be the exclusive agents for the famous Battle Creek Sanitarium foods. Advise us if interested. We are expecting a shipment very shortly. All Phones 211 118—8rd_ St. Last Delivery Saturday 4:30 p.m. Other week days 4:00 p. m. Close 8:00 p. m, : Cash Prices-for Groceries and Dry Goods South Side Grocery. For Saturday, Aug. 16th. Sugar, all you want, 121/ lbs. .: - $1.00 Swift’s Picnic Hams, per pound. . AT Electric Spark Soap, 25 bars for......... veces 108 Electric Spark Soap, 6 bars for................ -25, Creamery Butter, BD ied Scie oes sieve ce seca SM Carnation or Van Camps Milk ‘per can......... ‘Homa Malt Extract, regular price 75c.......... Cap. Kota Coffee, regular price 40c, our price.... Velvet Tobacco, 3 cans............ Fresh Prunes, 60x70, size, 3 Ibs. for... Seedless Raisins, 4:pound package....... Shean Snider’s Sauer Kraut, No, 214, per can oki, Ladies Silk Hose regular price $1.25, 48 Neck Ties regular price. B17. eee eee eee, 69 Overalls: 220 denim, size 82 to 42.............. 1.43 Boy’s: Overalls, double seat, double knees. . vevee LZ Men’s Union Suits, regular price $1.25, our price.. .88 55 25, s i 120 South 11th St. | Standard Oil Co, Proprietors ‘ " Opposite ‘ ge eae | SLOVEN BROS., Warehouse (ONE 571 th Side Grocery | z